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College Costs

Behind closed doors, Members of Congress are battling over a key concept in the pending Higher Education Act reauthorization -- a House of Representatives generated requirement that states maintain steady fiscal support for higher education. Not only should Congress ensure this concept makes it through to President Bush’s desk, it should strengthen the requirement to make it more than a toothless accountability measure.

In Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius's Democratic response to President Bush’s final State of the Union Speech Monday night, she touted a new law to “reduce the costs of college loans” as one of the major accomplishments of the new Democratic Majority in Congress. She was referring to enactment of the College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007, which among other things reduces interest rates on federally subsidized student loans. It was a big pat on the back for Congressional Democrats, who made cutting student loan interest rates in half a central part of their 2006 campaign. But Democrats should be careful not to oversell their achievement, as very few borrowers will get the full interest rate cut promised.

To be fair, under the new law, borrowers will also benefit from increased loan forgiveness for work in public service, substantially increased Pell Grant aid, and a decreased financial aid penalty associated with student work and savings. Indeed, the new law represents a significant increase in federal student aid. Higher Ed Watch has lauded it in the past.

In October and again in November, we warned that Congress might try to cut the Pell Grant program for low-income college students. We argued that after passing a new law in September that rightly whacked excess student loan bank subsidies to increase Pell Grant funding, Congress might later…

The U.S. News & World Report's annual ranking of colleges and universities, "America's Best Colleges 2008," was published last week with typical fanfare. High school students and their parents likely flipped immediately to the "top schools" ranking, where they found-gasp!-that Princeton University earned the top spot…

If you've seen an action film this summer, odds are you've also seen a slick advertisement touting the benefits of joining the Army or Marines-including help paying for college. You won't hear the word "Iraq," and as the Washington Post reported last week, it…

Financing a college education isn't easy for anybody these days, but it's an especially Herculean task if you're a working-class student living paycheck to paycheck. The obstacles to attending college are high, and the more you have to work to support yourself and your family, the less help…

For years, federal lawmakers have been divided over how best to make college more affordable. For the most part, Republicans have called for reining in rising college prices. Democrats, on the other hand, consistently have pushed for increased spending on student aid to keep college within the reach of low- and middle-income students.